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Neutrality in Library and Information Ethics: A Debate in Alternative Foundations
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Presentations | ||
ID: 332
/ [Single Presentation of ID 332]: 1
Panels 90 minutes Confirmation 1: I/we acknowledge that all session authors/presenters have read and agreed to the ASIS&T Annual Meeting Policies Topics: Privacy; Ethics; and Regulation (information ethics; computing ethics; AI ethics; open access; Information security; information privacy; information policy; legislation and regulation; international information issues) Keywords: Neutrality, libraries, ethics, rights, liberalism Neutrality in Library and Information Ethics: A Debate in Alternative Foundations 1University of Kentucky, USA; 2University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA; 3University of Glasgow, UK; 4Local Government Management Association, Ireland Neutrality is a concept that has been under significant critique both within wider society and library and information science. Supporters cite it as a worldview that respects the choices of individuals and that no one view of the common good should prevail in a pluralistic society. Critics argue that it reflects an out-of-date concept that enshrines power structures created by those already powerful and limits the choices and opportunities for those without power. This panel reflects on the arguments and considers what a library and information science ethic that does not build itself around neutrality might look like. |